A Lesson In Waiting Years To Finish A Project, Carport Edition

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Things have been going smoothly on the carport completion…until this morning. And the problem that we ran into this morning was totally my mistake. This carport was started back in 2018, and as I’ve already mentioned in a previous recent post, I had the crazy idea that I wanted them to do just so much, and then I’d finish the rest.

What part did I want to do myself? Installing the lighting, installing the ceiling, trimming out the posts, and all of the caulking and painting. Ridiculous. I have no idea what I was thinking.

I stayed busy working on other things, and kept procrastinating because that’s a big job that I didn’t really want to do. So five years later, the carport still looked like this…

So a few weeks ago, I finally decided that I didn’t want to do these jobs, so I hired it out, and they’ve been working on it since Monday.

Now when you look at the picture below, you’ll see two wires hanging down by the door…

Well, in the back entry of the studio, I have a three-gang switch. The middle switch on the dimmer is the back entryway light.

So in my mind, I remembered the other two switches going to those two wires hanging down outside the doors in the carport. I was going off of my five-year-old memory. So I told the guys that they could use one of those wires to power the lights that would be daisy chained together. That wire would come from the house, power these lights…

…and then go across to the other side of the carport and power these lights. These are all on Wire #1, which I remembered going to one of the switches in the back entry of the studio.

And then Wire #2, which I thought went to the third switch in the back entry of the studio, would go from the house, straight through to power the fan, and then continue on to power the flood light on the back of the carport.

And you can see where that wire comes out here. Wire #2. The wire that I thought was on the third of the three switches.

Well, as I headed out to the carport this morning to see the progress, I started to panic. I suddenly remembered that one of those three switches is for the light in the storage closet at the back of the studio! And if that’s the case, then what the heck does that other wire in the carport go to?!

Nothing had been hooked up in the breaker box yet, but they had just about finished all of the work. Everything was wired up. The ceiling was installed. Everything was caulked. They were just about ready to start painting when I broke the news that I had been wrong about the wiring. I was absolutely sick to my stomach.

The only explanation was that I could think of is that one of the wires went to the switch, and one of the wires went directly to the breaker box. So the wire that went directly to the breaker box would always be hot. There was no turning off that line. So if lights were hooked up to it, there would be no way to turn the lights off unless I go to the breaker box and flip the breaker.

So we decided to hook the two wires up to the breaker box and test them to see what happened. My stomach was tied in knots. I could just imagine having to undo everything they had done and start over.

There were two wires hanging down in the breaker box that weren’t hooked up. I’ve assumed all these years that those two loose wires in the breaker box were the same as those two wires hanging down in the carport. So he hooked up the first one, and…nothing. Absolutely nothing happened. Long story short, I figured out that that wire is the one that powers the front wall of my studio, which also had never been hooked up. (Which is why I’ve never shown you a picture of the pendant lights on the mural wall turned on. They didn’t have power yet.)

So that left one loose wire in the breaker box, but two wires in the carport. So he hooked up the second and final loose wire in the breaker box, and that one worked. It powered all of the lights in the carport — both lines. It powered Wire #1 and Wire #2. But mysteriously, only Wire #2 (the blue line) turned on and off with the switch.

Wire #1 (the pink line) stayed on and couldn’t be switched off with the light switch inside.

Now keep in mind, I’m the one who determined how everything was wired, and would be wired. So whatever is going on here was my decision. The only explanation is that Wire #1 is spliced into Wire #2 somewhere in the attic. So they’re both being powered by the same wire in the same breaker, but somewhere in the attic, Wire #2 splits off and goes to the light switch, while Wire #1 goes directly from the breaker box to the carport.

And because it’s been so long, and because I didn’t make any notes for myself, I have no idea why I chose to do it that way, or what my original plan was.

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